

Last year, the company renamed it to Azure DevOps, leaving the name open for other uses. Not that long ago, Visual Studio Online was Microsoft’s hub for all things DevOps, before DevOps was a buzzword. The emphasis here is on Visual Studio Online being a “companion.” It’s not meant to become a developer’s default environment but instead as a way to make a quick edit, review a pull request or join a Live Share session.Īnd if you think the name Visual Studio Online sounds familiar, that’s because Microsoft is actually recycling this name. Support for IntelliCode, Microsoft’s tool for AI-assisted development that became generally available today, is also built-in.

This means Visual Studio Online will also support all the extensions that are currently available for Visual Studio Code, as well as popular features like Visual Studio Code workspaces. The service is based on the Visual Studio Code, Microsoft’s popular free and open-source desktop code editor. Microsoft today announced the private preview launch of Visual Studio Online, an online code editor the company is positioning as a companion to Visual Studio and Visual Studio Code.
